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Americans are increasingly more optimistic about old age

The Lowell Sun

Updated:
02/03/2014 06:34:36 AM EST

By Tara Bahrampour

The Washington Post

As the global population of people 65 and older is projected to triple to 1.5 billion by 2050, public concern about the graying of society varies widely across the world, with Americans much more optimistic than those in many other countries thanks to immigration, a new study finds.

That optimism is not unfounded: While one in five U.S. residents is expected to be 65 or older by 2050, the country is aging at a slower rate than other nations. This is largely due to the high rate of immigration, according to the report, "Attitudes About Aging: A Global Perspective," released Thursday by the Pew Research Center.

With fertility rates dropping and longevity increasing, nations across the world will see their ranks of older people swell, with about one-sixth of the global population expected to be 65 or older by 2050. But perspectives about this diverge dramatically depending on a country's demographic, economic and political context, according to the report.

In surveys in 21 countries last spring, 22,425 people were asked whether aging posed a problem for their country, whether they anticipated having an adequate standard of living in their old age, and whether governments or families and older people themselves should bear more responsibility for the elderly.

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Americans ranked among the least worried, at 26 percent -- a stark difference from residents of the United States' main economic and political partners in Europe and Asia, where more than half the respondents said aging was a major problem.

The United States is projected to age more slowly, in large part because immigrants and their descendants are expected to shore up the ranks of young people of working age.

Immigration is projected to increase the U.S. population by 89 million by 2050, the report said, while the populations of Japan, China, South Korea, Germany, Russia, Italy and Spain are expected to stay the same or decrease.

Concern about the issue correlated closely with a country's rate of aging, said Rakesh Kochhar, a senior researcher at Pew and the report's lead author.

"In countries that are aging the most, people are indeed the most concerned," he said. "Europeans are already old and continuing to get older. Younger countries tended to be more optimistic."

The most worried respondents were in Japan, South Korea and China, where 87, 79 and 67 percent of people, respectively, said aging was a major problem for their country. Europeans also expressed a high level of concern.

But even as attitudes in the United States have become more negative since the 2007 recession, Americans remain far more optimistic, perhaps because the country's demographic trajectory is projected to remain relatively stable.

"Unlike Europe, it's going to maintain its demographic status, where its share of the global population is unchanged," Kochhar said. As the United States increases in size relative to other countries whose populations are shrinking, he said, it is likely to see economic benefits.

Africa is expected to see the greatest population growth by 2050, with an increase of 1.4 billion people. Europe is expected to shrink by more than 30 million.

Confidence in one's standard of living in old age was related to both the country's rate of aging and its economic vitality, the report said. Respondents who believed the government bears more responsibility for taking care of older people tended to be less optimistic about their old age.

The coming demographic changes could significantly alter the distribution of global power in coming decades, with younger countries potentially able to pull ahead of older ones, the report said.

Countries where the younger populations are expected to increase, such as Egypt, Pakistan and Nigeria, have a brighter outlook, with more economic resources expected to be freed up for economic development.

In the United States, the swelling ranks of older people are expected to be offset by the infusion of more younger people, putting the country in a better position than its many of its major economic and political partners, the report said.

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